Pneumonia got me thinking

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81Ttop

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Before I quit smoking every year in December I would get bronchitis than pneumonia it was a yearly tradition. Than I quit smoking 8 years ago and haven't gotten pneumonia until this year pretty standard got a bad cough than bronchitis than pneumonia. I've been on antibiotics for 9 days now and still have 3 days to go, not to mention the steroids, inhaler, and cough meds. If I was just struggling without Rx and was pushing fluids and resting I cant imagine what I would go through, so does anyone have any books or where to start in home remedy. My library has a lot on first aid and some medical books but not anything on infections or treatment.
 
well,first you take your meds,if given to a certain period,take it.
pneumonia untreated can kill you,you rest as much as possible,to get the snot out of your lungs,take a large plastic bottle,fill it with water ( 2/3), take plastic hose,1/2 inch,2 feet long and blow
into the bottle 3-5 times / day , 15-20 times each time,you'll clear a ton of snot from your respiratory system that way.
 
Before I quit smoking every year in December I would get bronchitis than pneumonia it was a yearly tradition. Than I quit smoking 8 years ago and haven't gotten pneumonia until this year pretty standard got a bad cough than bronchitis than pneumonia. I've been on antibiotics for 9 days now and still have 3 days to go, not to mention the steroids, inhaler, and cough meds. If I was just struggling without Rx and was pushing fluids and resting I cant imagine what I would go through, so does anyone have any books or where to start in home remedy. My library has a lot on first aid and some medical books but not anything on infections or treatment.

Not much replaces antibiotics, we would have to revert to the old ways, bloodletting was a common practice for many ailments including pneumonia, it does work for a good number of people but not as effective as antibiotics, quinine (bark from a cinchona tree) was very good for fevers including malaria. up until antibiotics having pneumonia was almost a death sentence. Bloodletting was used up until the 1940s, today the medical field is talking about bringing it back, back in the day it was so common that barbers performed it in it's business, where do you think the red and white or red white blue barbers post came from ;)
 
Not much replaces antibiotics, we would have to revert to the old ways, bloodletting was a common practice for many ailments including pneumonia, it does work for a good number of people but not as effective as antibiotics, quinine (bark from a cinchona tree) was very good for fevers including malaria. up until antibiotics having pneumonia was almost a death sentence. Bloodletting was used up until the 1940s, today the medical field is talking about bringing it back, back in the day it was so common that barbers performed it in it's business, where do you think the red and white or red white blue barbers post came from ;)
And don't forget the leeches!
 
modern medicine is all based on the old fashioned natural/herbal medicine which is all we had at one time, "wise women" of the village were the doctors of the day and knew all the remedies and for which ailment.
modern medicine took the active ingredient of the natural medicine and then made a pharmacy equivalent of it.
the one problem I have with modern medicine is that is cures the symptom and not the cause and it usually has loads of side effects which you need to take something else to cure that which causes another side effect so on and so forth.
 
And don't forget the leeches!
I’ve read a lot about leaches being helpful for increasing circulation in a wound and maggots for eating away dead and infected tissue in a wound, but I’ve never seen anything about blood letting being worthwhile. When you’re sick draining blood not only increases your chance of infection but drains your energy and lowers your ability to recover.
 
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modern medicine is all based on the old fashioned natural/herbal medicine which is all we had at one time, "wise women" of the village were the doctors of the day and knew all the remedies and for which ailment.
modern medicine took the active ingredient of the natural medicine and then made a pharmacy equivalent of it.
The branch of science that deals with this is called "Pharmacognosy." I had never heard of it before a friend took me to the Pharmacognosy lab at Ole Miss. That lab has run a Federally funded marijuana farm for fifty years. It is the only completely legal (by Federal law) marijuana farm in the U.S. and the only Federally approved supplier of medical marijuana, supplying a few patients still in the Compassionate Investigational New Drug program. (approved in 1978)

If medical marijuana is legalized nationally, it will be largely due to that department's research in conjunction with the National Center for Natural Products Research, and the University of Mississippi Medical Center. The UMMC has filed a Investigational New Drug Application (IND) to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for using CBD to treat pediatric epilepsy. If approved, that will be the first Federally approved use for medical marijuana in 40 years.
 
My understanding they are trying to synthesize CBD, I think that is where a problem would come from unfortunately like most synthesize drugs that originally taken naturally.
From the web site https://pharmacy.olemiss.edu/marijuana/cannabis-rd/
A standardized CBD extract provided by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) Drug Supply Program (the marijuana farm at Ole Miss) will be delivered to the UMMC Pharmacy to be dispensed to patients enrolled in the study. This clinical study enrolls children with refractory or more serious types of epilepsy.
 
The branch of science that deals with this is called "Pharmacognosy." I had never heard of it before a friend took me to the Pharmacognosy lab at Ole Miss. That lab has run a Federally funded marijuana farm for fifty years. It is the only completely legal (by Federal law) marijuana farm in the U.S. and the only Federally approved supplier of medical marijuana, supplying a few patients still in the Compassionate Investigational New Drug program. (approved in 1978)

If medical marijuana is legalized nationally, it will be largely due to that department's research in conjunction with the National Center for Natural Products Research, and the University of Mississippi Medical Center. The UMMC has filed a Investigational New Drug Application (IND) to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for using CBD to treat pediatric epilepsy. If approved, that will be the first Federally approved use for medical marijuana in 40 years.
I knew someone who worked in that lab - it was super cool. They study all kinds of plants, not just marijuana.
 
It was kind of an initiation rite at Ole Miss to tell incoming Freshman that there was a pot field on campus, and then take them to see it. Of course everyone thought it was a gag until they saw the field...and dropped their jaws, LOL. At the time the pot field was smaller and in an obscure corner of campus in the woods. It looked like a prison yard with guard towers at each corner.
 
It was kind of an initiation rite at Ole Miss to tell incoming Freshman that there was a pot field on campus, and then take them to see it. Of course everyone thought it was a gag until they saw the field...and dropped their jaws, LOL. At the time the pot field was smaller and in an obscure corner of campus in the woods. It looked like a prison yard with guard towers at each corner.
They told us stories about how you could get a job working in the guard towers, and it was the best job ever because you just sat around doing nothing, but there was this "one person" who went and stole some weed and went to jail forever, or some variation of that tale.
 
The UMMC has filed a Investigational New Drug Application (IND) to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for using CBD to treat pediatric epilepsy. If approved, that will be the first Federally approved use for medical marijuana in 40 years.
They got FDA and DEA approval. The first federally approved medical marijuana university clinical trials are now underway at the University of Mississippi Medical center.
https://www.sunherald.com/news/health/article221558440.html

JACKSON

Over four years after Gov. Phil Bryant signed Harper Grace’s Law, allowing clinical trials of a specific marijuana-derived drug, the University of Mississippi Medical Center announced Thursday that those trials had begun.

The trial, which will study the effect of cannabidiol — or CBD, as it’s known — on children with severe epilepsy, is the very first university-based clinical trial of a cannabis extract to meet federal standards.

The agencies that had to sign off on the trial before it could start include the Food and Drug Administration, the Internal Review Board and the Drug Enforcement Administration.

“So you can imagine we’ve had many regulatory hurdles to get here today … in order to provide such unique opportunities for our patients,” said Richard Summers, UMMC’s vice chancellor of research.

The trial will enroll ten Mississippi children with severe epilepsy, though the university estimates that epilepsy is common enough that about 2,000 Mississippi children could qualify. More than a third of children with epilepsy still seize, even with medications on the current market, and this study will target those particular children, according to Dr. Brad Ingram, a pediatric neurologist and the principal investigator for this project.​
 
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